Gaza, Israel and Trump
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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli and U.S. officials were to meet Wednesday in Washington to discuss post-war Gaza, even as Israel's military called the evacuation of Gaza City “inevitable” ahead of a new offensive and no signs of a ceasefire were in sight.
Israel is pushing back on a U.N.-backed report declaring famine in parts of the Gaza Strip. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the report an 'outright lie.'
A Democratic National Committee panel on Tuesday failed to advance dueling resolutions on the party’s stance on Israel’s war in Gaza, after one proposal was voted down and a second was withdrawn.
Nationwide protest saw tens of thousands of Israelis take to the streets to demand an end to the war in Gaza and see the remaining hostages released. The demonstrations come against the backdrop of global condemnation of an Israeli attack captured live on television.
Fox News national correspondent Jeff Paul gets an inside look at a new aid distribution site in Gaza on ‘Special Report.’
The Israeli military has claimed its double strike on a Gaza hospital that killed health workers and journalists on Monday was targeting a camera positioned by Hamas, without providing evidence, as the United Nations condemned the attack and demanded “accountability and justice.
Israel will send call-ups to 50,000 to 60,000 reservists as part of its plans to occupy Gaza City, according to an Israeli military official.
Israel struck Nasser hospital in the south of the Gaza Strip, killing at least 20 people, including five journalists who worked for Reuters, the Associated Press, Al Jazeera and others.
The measures were almost entirely symbolic, yet laid bare the broader fault lines dividing and shaping the party nearly two years after the war began.